The Black Manhattan Cocktail
On a recent bourbon hunting adventure, I happened to come across something that caught my eye. It had an old-fashioned red label featuring two old-timey characters pouring libations placed on some sort of black spirit in a stout bottle. The neck of the bottle was wrapped with brown paper and secured with twine in a simple knot. "THIS...", I thought to myself, "THIS is how you package a bottle". To my surprise, not only was it spirit I've never used before, it was placed under the "Local Spirits" section of the store and made and distilled by the High Wire Distilling Company, right here in Charleston. Even though this bottle of High Wire's 'Southern" Amaro Liqueur piqued my interest, I still had no idea what "Amaro" was, what it tasted like or how to use it in a cocktail. So I did what any other logical Charleston bourbon/food/cocktail/etc blogger would do (there's a bunch of those, right?) ... I Googled it... yep, right there in the middle of the liquor store. Holding the bottle in one hand and my phone in the other hand, I begin to read a couple of articles regarding the spirit at hand (literally). After 15 minutes or so of loitering and awkwardly holding a bottle in my hand (definitely warranted some odd stares by the staff), I finally gather the following:
Amaro is an Italian herbal liqueur that is commonly drunk as an after-dinner digestif. It usually has a bitter-sweet flavor, sometimes syrupy, and has an alcohol content between 16% and 40%
Great... So far, so good, sounds like a mix of Campari and sweet vermouth, which I love... but I have both of those at home. I do some further research and reach the High Wire Distilling Co. site (in hindsight, I probably should've visited this site first), here's their description:
High Wire Distilling Co. - Southern Amaro Liqueur
A Southern expression of an Italian classic, our signature amaro is handcrafted from regionally grown and foraged ingredients such as Charleston black tea, yaupon holly, Dancy tangerine, and mint. Sip by itself as a digestif, or use in a riff on a classic cocktail!
Proof: 60
Tasting Notes: Fresh citrus, licorice, light mint, medium body, slightly bitter, vanilla on finish
Cocktails: Black Manhattan, Boulevardier, Paper Plane, Negroni
Finally, after a good 20 minutes, I was sold. I purchase my bottle and make my way home. Now I need to figure out what a "Black Manhattan" entailed. Follow me on my Amaro journey...
Yield: 1 cocktail
Ingredients
2 oz bourbon or rye whiskey (I used Noah's Mill bourbon) 2 Dashes of Fee Brothers Aztec Chocolate Bitters 1/2 oz Sweet vermouth (optional) 1/2 oz High Wire Amaro (increase to 1oz if not using sweet vermouth) 1 Navel orange peel 1 Luxardo Maraschino Cherries Ice cubes for mixing
Other Tools
Mixing Glass (I use a Yarai Mixing Glass) Barspoon Jigger Peeler or channel knife Julep Strainer Chilled martini or coupe glass (I used a rocks glass) Pick or cocktail straw
Instructions